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OU1 64740
OSMANIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARY(5aII No. 1 49 . 3/B95M Accession No. 2 1 B 3
Author Burhan ahmad faruqiTitle -Mujaddid's conception of tawhid
This book should he returned on or before the date last marked below,
THEMUJADDID'S CONCEPTION
OF TAWHID
Imam-i-Rabbani Mujaddid-i-Alf-i-ThamShaikh Ahmad Sirhindi's Conception of Tawhid
OR
THE 'MUJADDID'SCONCEPTION OF TAWHID
By
BURHAN AHMAD FARUQI, MA, Ph.DAligarh Muslim University. Ahgarh
With a foreword by
SYED ZAFARUL HASANMA (Alig),D Phil (Oxon), Dr Phil (Erl )
SH. MUHAMMAD ASHRAFKASHMIRI BAZAR - LAHORE (INDIA)
First published
October 1940
Published by Sh Muhammad A^hrafKashmiri Bazar. Lahore
Printed at the Ripon Printing Press, Bull Road, Lahore
bv Mirza Mohammad Sadiq
Dedicated
to
my revered teacherDr. Syed Zafarul Hasan
who watched my life with paternal concernand
at whose feet I learnt to understand
the fundamental problemsin
Philosophy and Religion
FOREWORD
INthis treatise Dr. Burhan Ahmad Faruqi hasdrawn our attention to a central point of reli-
gion, mysticism and philosophy. ^ ev- affirmed>y*.) O^x^ which thereby became a widely accepteddoctrine amongst Islamic sufis. ***s^* $> firmlyand solemnly denied it, and persisted in his denial
throughout his career ; and he based his denial,
not on extraneous considerations, but on mystic
experience itself. Dr. Burhan has formulated and
clarified the issue between these two great mysticswith a care and perspicuity which deserves
praise ; and he has brought religion and philoso-
phy to bear on it. In this connection his dis-
course on the distinction of Religious Conscious-
ness from mystic consciousness and speculativeconsciousness is indeed illuminating; while the
logic of his contention and the cogency of his
arguments seem to leave little to desire. Now
8 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
after the relapse of Islamic mysticism again into-
>**-) ^^j, it was high time that an earnest studyof this kind should have been undertaken and
pursued with the thoroughness characteristic of
Dr. Burhan Ahmad's work. -
Another conspicuous service of Dr. Burhan
Ahmad's book is that it has brought the great
Mujaddid and his far-reaching movement within
the purview of western orientalists. Certainly it
is most interesting to note how deeply has this
unique personality influenced the nerve of Islamic
thought, specially in India, throughout the last
three and a half centuries. The inquiry if pursuedfurther and still more in detail will, I believe'
repay the time and labour bestowed upon it.
It has been my privilege to watch the growthof this valuable treatise at every stage of its
development. I can confidently recommend it to
all Muslim scholars and western orientalists for
sympathetic study and careful scrutiny.
Aligarh S. Z. HASAN30-9-40
CONTENTS
Foreword ... ... ... . vn
Abbreviations ... ... .. . xi
PRELIMINARY ... ... .. ... 1(a) Biographical sketch ... ... . 7
(fe) liis Times ... ... ... 12(c) His Achievements .. ... . 28(eO His Influence ... . ... 31
INTRODUCTION Unity of the World-Principle ... 45CHAPTER I The Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 85
1. Ibn Arabi's Wahdat-i-Wujud or Unityismand the Mujaddid's Criticism of it 86
2. The Mujaddid's Tawhid ^ . ... 117CHAPTER II The Reception of the Mujaddid's
Conception of Tawhid ... .. 141
1 Shah Wali-Ullah ..1452. Khwaja Mir Nasir and Khwaja Mir Dard ... 1493. Mawlwi Ghulam Yahya ... ..1574. Shah Rafi-uddin ... ... ..1635. Shah Sayyid Ahmad Barelwi ... ... 164
THE CONCLUSION .. ... .. ... 171INDEX .. 189
ABBREVIATIONS
AM = 'Awn-ul-Ma'bUd fi SJjarh Abu DSud (Ar.), by MawlwiShamsul Haq of Patna, AnsSrl Press, Delhi, 1323 A H.
At. = 'Abaqat (Ar.), by Mawlwi Shah Isma'il SJiahid, (undated).DB. . Damagh-ul-Batil (Per ), by Shah RafT-uddln, MS. No. 1699,
Oriental Library, Bankipur.
Ep = EpistleFH. = Fusus-ul-Hikam (Ar ), by Ibn 'ArabI, MS.FM. = Futuhat Makklyya (Ar ), by Ibn 'ArabI, Darul-Kutub al-
'Arabia. Egypt. 1329 A.H.FW. Faysalat-u-Wahadat-ul-wujud-wash-shuhGd (Ar.).by Sh^ah
Wall-Ullah, AhmadI Press, Delhi, 1324 A.H.
HQ. == Urdu Translation of Khw5ja Badr-uddin's Hadrat-ul-Quds,Islamia Steam Press, Lahore, 1341 A.H.
IK. = 'Ilm-ul-Kitab (Per.), by |Chwaja Mir Dard, Ansarl PressDelhi, 1308 A H.
KH. = Kahmat-ul-Haqq (Per ), by Mawlwi GhuUUn Yahya, MSShefta Collection, Lytton Library, M. U., Ahgarh.
KhA. = Khazlnat-ul-Asfiya (Per ), by Gh/ilam Sarwar Lahawri,Thamar-i-Hmd Press, Lucknow, 1290 A.H.
M. = Maktubat-J-Im5m-i-RabbanI (Per.), by Shaikh AhmadSirhmdl, edited by M Nur Ahmad, printed at Amritsar,1334 A H.
MM. = Mabda-o-Ma'ad (Per.), by SJiaikh Ahmad Sirhmdl,Mujaddidl Press, Amritsar, 1330 A H.
xii Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
MT = Muntakhab-ul-Tawarikh (Per), by Mulla 'Abdul QadirBadayunI, Asiatic Society of Bengal, Calcutta, 3865 A.D.
MtM. = Maqamat-i-Mazharl (Per ), by Sh5h Ghulam'Ali, MujtabatPress, Delhi, 1309 A.H
NA = N3la-i-'Andalib (Per), by KhwSja Mir Nasir 'Andalib,Shshjahan! Press, Bhupal, 1310 A.H
Q = Qur-3n Anjuman-i-Him5yat-i-Islam edition, Lahore,1354 A H
RQ Urdu Translation of Khwaja Kamal-uddin's Raudat-ul-Qayyurmyya, Civil Steam Press, Lahore (undated).
SA = Sawanih Ahraadi, by Ja'far 'All, Sufi Publishing Co PmdiBah5-uddln, Steam Press, Lahore (undated).
SM = Sirat-i-Mustaqim (Per ), by Mawlwi Shah Ismail Shahid.Mujtabai Press, Delhi, 1322 A H
ShF = Sharh FusHs-ul-Hikam (Ar.), by 'Abdur Razz5q al-Qashani, Maymaniyya Press. Egypt, 1321 A H
TA = Tadhkirat-ul-Awhy3 (Per ), by Farld-uddin 'Attar, MujtabaiPress, Delhi, 1305 A H.
TtA = TasSmf-i-Ahmadiyya (Urdu), by Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan,Ahgarh Institute Press, Ahgarh, 1300 A.H
TJ = Tuzuk-i-Jah5ngiri (Per), by Mirza Hadi, edited by SirSayyid Ahmad Khan, his private Press, Ahgarh, 1281 A H.
ZM = Zubdat-ul-Maq5m5t (Per ), by KhwSja Muhammad Hashim,Mahmud Press, Lucknow, 1310 A H.
PRELIMINARY
THISdissertation is an attempt to work
out the conception of Tawhid in the
thought of that great Islamic mystic, viz.,Shaikh Ahmad Sirhindi, who is generallycalled the Mujaddid-i-Alf-i-Thani
*
(the
*The word Mujaddid can be translated as the Reformer,the Regenerator, or the Renewer. I prefer Renewer.
The idea of Mujaddid has its origin in the hadith :
" God will, on the eve of every century, raise a person inthis nation (Islam) who would renew the religion " : AbuDSud (202-275 A.H.). It is maintained that many personshave accordingly been the Mujaddids of their centuries, e.g.,'Umar b. 'Abdul 'Aziz (d. 101 A.H.) First Century ; Imamh.5fi'I Muhammad b. Idrls (d. 204 A.H.) Second Century;
Ibn Suraij (d. 306 A.H.) Third Century; Imam BaqillanIMuhammad b. Tayyab (d. 403 A.H.) or ImSm AsfrSyyini Ahmadb. Muhammad (d. 406 A.H.) Fourth Century ; ImSm GhazzSlI
2 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
Renewer of Islam on the Head of the second
thousand of the Islamic Era). The Shaikh
himself had the inspired belief that he was a
Mujaddid.1
A.H.) Sixth Century; Ibn Daqiq Al'id Muhammad b. 'All
(d. 702 A.H.) Seventh Century , Imam Bulqim Sir2juddln(d. 905 AH) Eighth Century ; Jalaluddln al-Suyuti (d. 911A.H.) Ninth Century, and others of the subsequent centuries.
(Cf AM., Vol. IV, p. 181). However, it is noteworthy that
only Shaikh Ahmad has claimed the dignity of the Mujaddid- 1-Alf-i-Thani for himself.
Khw5ja Kamaluddln Muhammad Ahsan has quoted two
hadithes m &"Z*y?^\(l)
"A man will arise at the beginning of the llth century, who willbe a great light and whose name will be the same as mine , (hewill arise) amidst tyrant kings ; thousands of men will enterParadise through his intercession/'
>yo (r)
41 There will be a man in my nation who will be called a'
conjomer,' through whose intercession there will enter Paradise
so-and-so."
It is believed that these predictions were made about ShaikViAhmad (See RQ., Part I, pp. 37-38.)
1 The Mujaddid keenly realises the need of a great Reformer
MujaddicTs Conception of Tawhid 3
It was Mulla 'Abdul Hakim of Sialkot
(d. 1067 A.H.), the most illustrious scholar of
the day and the Shaikh-al-Islam of India, whowasfche first to apply to Shaikh Ahmad the
epithet of Mujaddid-i-Alf-i-Thanl.1 Indeed
all the divines and mystics of eminence have
acknowledged him as such. For example,Shah Wali-Ullah 2 and his son Shah 'Abdul
in a letter to his son KhwSja Muhammad Ssdiq (1000-1025 A.H.).See M., Vol I, Ep. 234. Further he expressly claims for himself
the dignity of Mujaddid-i-Alf-i-Th2nI. See M , Vol. II, Ep. 4.Again writing to his son, Khw5ja Muhammad Ma'sum (1009-1079A.H.) he says : ?
"Praise be to Allah who created me a conjoiner between two
oceans and a pacifier between two parties. (See M , Vol. II,Ep. 6.). The reference is perhaps to the last Hadith in the
preceding note
*KA . Vol. I, p. 614.'Shah Wall-Ullah (1114-1176 A.M.). He was the most
eminent divine of his age, and a mystic too. He belonged tothe Mujaddidi Naqshbandi School. He acquired mystic dis-cipline from his father, Sh5h 'Abdur Rahim, and is said to be
the'
Mujaddid'
of his time. He is the founder of a school inHadith and Tafslr. He translated the Qur-3n into Persianand is the author of many famous works on Hadith, Theologyand Mysticism.
4 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
'Aziz,1
among a host of others, always speakof him as Mujaddid-i-Alf-i-Tliani. The latter
is also reported to have said that amongst the
mystics of Islam, Shaikh 'Abdul Qadir Jllanl
(470-560 A.H.) and Shaikh Ahmad Sirhindlare the two greatest, only he could not decide
which was the greater of the two.
* Shaikh Ahmad is the first and the greatestamong the mystics of Islam who expressly and
strenuously opposed the Pantheistic concep-
tion of Tawhid known as Wahdat-i-Wujud2
or Tawhid-i-Wujudi. This conception had
become almost universal amongst Muslim
1 Shah 'Abdul 'Aziz (1159-1248 A.H ) was the eldest son of
Shsh Wall-Ullah. He was the most celebrated scholar of hisday and universally respected like his father. He taughtHadlth to the famous mystic Shah Sayyid Ahmad Barelwl, andalso initiated him into the Naqshbandi School. He wrotemany works on Kal3m and Hadlth.
* Wahdat-i-Wujud ( >js^5 Oo^ ) or Tawhid-i-Wujudi( ^J?*}^} ***^5* ) ls umty of Being. It is the doctrine of
very many mystics in Isl5m. The exact equivalent would be
Unityism that is, existent is one. This soon becomes Identy-tsm that it is identical with everything else, which m the endpasses on to pantheism, that it is God and God is all. It
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 5
mystics, specially since Ibn*
Arabl l who wroteon it extensively and has had enormous influ-
ence on the subsequent thought of Islam,
and gave it a strenuous push forward.
Now the opposition of Shaikh Ahmad toWahdat-i-Wujud is based not on theological
dogma or philosophical argument, but on
Kashf 2 or direct religious experience. Con-
is also called Wujudiyyat. Hence Wujudiyym or Sufiya-i-Wujudiyya or Mawahidln are those who believe in Unityism.
1 Ibn 'Arabl, Muhayyuddm (560-638 A.H.) was a mystic ofgreat eminence. He is generally styled as Shaikh-i-Akbar,the Greatest Shaikh. He was born at Murcia in Spam, but heshifted to Seville which he made his home for thirty years.In 598 AH he set out for the East from where he neverreturned home. He visited Mecca and Mosul. His fame wentwith him everywhere. Finally he settled down in Damascuswhere he died in 638 A.H. He belonged to the Zahirl School,but rejected Taqlld in doctrinal matters. Ibn 'Arabl's sole
guide was inner light with which he believed himself illuminatedin a special way. He is said to be the author of as many as 400books. The most famous of his works are Futuhat-i-Makkiyyaand FusUs-ul-Hikam. In the latter he has discussed the
pantheistic conception of Tawhld at length. He was denouncedas Zindlq in Egypt, and there was a move to assassinate him.Ibn Taimiyya (661-728 A.H.), one of the greatest divines n
Islam, criticised Ibn 'Arab! unreservedly.1Kasljf (v-x
6 MujaddicTs Conception of Tawhid
sequently it gave rise to burning controver-
sies among mystics. Many scholars and
mystics of eminence took exception to his
position while others emphatically affirmed
it. It is worth while to go into the matter at
length and try to determine its exact position
as best as we can.
sion of facts and events as well as truths, mundane and celestial,
by inner sight or light : generally it is symbolic. Shuhud (^X"**vis direct apprehension of the being and attributes of God. Ilham
(fL$Jl) 1S inspiration ; technically it is confined to mystics ; it is
reception of guidance or inspiration from above. The guidancethus received is not absolutely infallible, hence it is not bindingon all but only on the recipient of it, provided it is not contrary
to any injunction received through the Prophet. Wahl (tj^)is literally communication or command ; technically it is com-munication imparted by God to a prophet, its highest form beingcommunication through the agency of an angel. Guidance re-ceived through it is absolutely sure and binding on all. GenerallyRevelation may be regarded as an equivalent term to Wahi, butthe exact significance of the term is as described above.
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
Biographical Sketch
A BRIEF biographical sketch of Shaikh Ahmad,with special reference to his times, would not
be out of place here.
Shaikh Ahmad is a descendant of 'Umar,the Great. He was born in Sirhind in 971A.H. Sirhind is really Sahrand, which means
the forest of tigers. It is related that in the
days of Feroz Shah Tughlaq (752-790 A.H.)once the royal treasury was passing throughthis forest under the imperial guard. A saint,Sahib-i-Kashf 1 was travelling along with the
treasury. When the caravan reached thespot where Sirhind is now situated, the sainthad the inspiration that a very great saint
will be born at the place. The news reached
the King. He ordered the construction of a1 Sahib-i-Kashf (.*'X< ^A*Lo) is saint, rather a person
who has spiritual illumination.
8 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
town there and entrusted the work to ImamRaffuddm,1 the ancestor of Shaikh Ahmad,While the construction was in progress, ShahBu 'All Qalandar 2 came and helped in it, andinformed Imam Raff that the great saint ofthe prophecy would be his descendant.
3
Shaikh Ahmad received his early educationat home. He learnt the Qur-an 4 by heart
'Imam Rafi'uddm is the sixth ancestor of the Mujaddid.He was the brother of Khw2ja Fateh-Ullah the prime ministerof Feroz Shah Tughlaq and a disciple of the famous saint
Sayyid Jalal Bukhari (707-750 A.H.) known as Mukhdum-i-Jahaman. Imam Rafl' was entrusted with the management ofthe town of Sirhmd where he settled down after its construc-tion.
a harfuddm Bu 'AH Shah Qalandar of Panipat was asaint of very great eminence. He came from 'Iraq to Panipat,where he died in 724 A.H. It is related that he helped in the
construction of the town of Sirhmd. However the dates donot tally. For Feroz Shah in whose time Sirhind was cons-
tructed began his reign in 752 A.H., i.e., 28 years after the death
of the Qalandar.
RQ., Part I. pp. 22-23.4 The Qur-an is the book revealed to Muhammad word by
word and letter by letter. It is the source of all the teachings of
Islam. All other sources must be in harmony with it. It is also
called Kit3b(K*)-the Book. Hadith (cLU^X*,) is the
second source. It embodies the sayings and doings of Muhammad,
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 91
very early. Then he took to the study of
Hadith, Tafslr or Exegesis and Ma'qul (J>***)
or Philosophy and went to renowned scholars
at various places. When he was at Agra,studying Hadith and Tafslr, Abul Fadl and
Faidi, Emperor Akbar's right hand men, hear-
ing of his brilliance, tried to draw him into
their circle. However, this friendship did
not last very long, because the Shaikh took
serious offence to Abul Fadl's anti-Islamic
attitude. It is said that a portion of Faidfs
celebrated Sawati'-al-Ilhaml was written by
and as a source of Isl5m it is next in authority to the Qur-3n.
Ijma" ( ^U-^-t ) is the third source of Islam , it means the con-
sensus of the faithful on a point which is not to be found
explicitly in the Qur-3n and the Hadith. Qiyas ( ^/ ^* )means inference. By some it is regarded as the fourth sourceof Islam. In order to be valid it should be based on the Qur-3nand Hadith (and on Ijraa").
1 Sawati'-al-Ilham( ^l^J^H l>l^*o )
known as " Tafsir-i-bi
nuqat" (iaJu -_> , ^,W.A'J ) is a commentary on the Qur-an in
Arabic written by Abul Paid Faidi, the poet-laureate of Akbar,.which has the very difficult peculiarity of containing no letter
with a dot. It is noteworthy that the Arabic alphabet has IS
dotted letters.
10 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
the Shaikh.1
After finishing his education at an early age
the Shaikh took to mystic discipline under
the guidance of his father who was an emi-nent mystic and received Khilafat
2 from him
in the Chishtiya and Suhrawardiya orders.3
When he was 28 he went to Delhi and joinedthe Naqshbandiya order, and soon received
its Khilafat from Khwaja Baqi-Billah (972-1012 A.H.).
4 The Khwaja is the person from
whom this order begins in India. It is saidthat he was directed in a vision to leave his
home, Afghanistan, and go to India, where
he had to initiate a very great man into theorder.
5 This great man was Shaikh Ahmad,
1 RQ , Part I, pp. 60, 62, 63 ; Cf. HQ., Vol. II, pp. 9-10.1 Khilafat ( OwU ) : In mystic terminology it is generally
the recognition of the spiritual leader that the disciple has com-
pleted the mystic journey and has reached such a high stage of
development that he can be authorised to guide others on the
way.
RQ., Part I, pp. 69-70.4/tod., pp. 76-81.
*lbid., pp. 72-73.
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 11
who quickly went through all the stages ofthe mystic journey, and became so great at
it that even the Khwaja used to sit beforehim as a disciple,
1 and confessed that it was
through Shaikh Ahmad's spiritual help thathe got out of the mazes of Wahdat-i-Wujud
2
RQ,PartI, p. 113.J ZM., p. 155.
12 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
HIS TIMES
1. Mystics
WHEN the great Mujaddid came to his taskof reform, he found that Tasawwuf * had
taken complete possession of the Muslim
soul. A Pantheistic Deity had been substi-tuted for the Monotheistic, Personal, Trans-
cendent God of Islam.2 Excessive belief inKaramat or miracles of saints was commonlycherished. Many un-Islamic means of the
development of occult powers had been intro-
duced into Tasawwuf itself. The mysticshad gone to the extent of denying the com-
mandments of Shari'at 3 or the Law of Islam1 Tasawwuf ( \*y** ) or Islamic mysticism is an attempt to
have the direct experience of what the Prophet of Islam himselfis supposed to have experienced.
MT.. Vol. II. p. 258.
'S&arl'at (s^U*J^*>) Law, the Code of IslSm which pres-cribes various modes of action and practice. Jarlqat
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 13
as universally binding, and to regard Shari'at
itself as something external and superficial;
indulgence in Sima4 * or music hearing had
become the order of the day. They were
indifferent to the Sunnat or the example of
the Prophet. They extolled Sukr2 or ecstasy
above Sahw, or sane rationality. The dia-
ls the way towards God through purification of soul, for whichsome extra ascetic means are adopted by the mystic. Ma'rifat
(
14 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
logue1 between Mahmud of Ghazni and
Shaikh Abul Hasan Kharqanl is a pertinent
example showing clearly that since long the
mystics had practically severed their con-
nection with Islam and the Prophet.
2. The Theologians
FURTHER, the 'Ulama' or theologians had
1 Sult3n Mahmud (d. 421 A.H ) was once passing byKharqan. He had heard the fame of Shaikh Abul HasanKharq5ni (d. 419 A H ). He wished to see the Shaikh So hesent his messenger to the Shaikh asking his permission to visit
him. The Sultan instructed the messenger that if the Shaikhwere not willing to grant him an interview he should recite the
Quranic verse : j*-=xx> ^xY^^ 3 J>**/^|^*^>^ ^xi|l_^4>l"Obey Allah, obey the Prophet and obey the sovereign from
amongst you." The Shaikh did not attend to the Sultan's message.The messenger accordingly recited the verse. The Shaikh said :
"I am so busy with
'
obey Allah'
that I am ashamed to neglect'obey the Prophet' how can I obey the sovereign. (See TA.,p. 352.)
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 15
taken exclusively to Fiqh or Jurisprudence as
the whole of religious learning; they had
ceased to refer to the Qur-an and Hadith
the genuine sources of Islam. Consequently
only the juristic view of Islam was alive, the
spirit of Islam had died. Many a theologianwas of the type of Makhdum-ul-Mulk who,in order to avoid the payment of Zakat
1 or
tax on wealth, transferred his property at the
end of the year to his wife and had it retrans-
ferred to himself before the time of the pay-
ment next year.3They were busy in the hair-
splitting discussions of the problems of Fiqh ;
minutest differences sufficed to cause peren-
nial quarrels among them. They were gener-ally full of ambition, always hunting after
worldly success. They could be induced to
give Fatwa (^^X) or decision of the sacred law,
1 Zakat ( o^J ) : Tax on wealth prescribed \>y Islam which
is iV of one's yearly savings. It is one 'of the five injunctions
of Isl5m.
* ML, Vol. II, p. 203
16 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
permitting the Haram (f1^) or the prohibitedand prohibiting the Halal (J^L-*.) or the
permitted. Makhdum-ul-Mulk is said to have
given a Fatwa that the ordinance of Hajj1 or
Pilgrimage was no longer binding, that it had
rather become injurious.2
3. Akbars Policy
THE policy of reconciliation which theMughal Emperor Akbar persistently followed
throughout his long reign (963-1013 A.H.)was naturally calculated to hurt and weaken
the religious consciousness of Musalmans.
In certain of its phases it outraged their
feelings. They felt that Islam was undonein India. Mulla 'Abdul Qadir Badayuni,
1It is binding on every Muslim to go on pilgrimage to
Mecca at least once in his life, provided he can afford the
expenses of the journey.
'MT., Vol. II, pp.203, 259.
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 17
a contemporary historian and a zealous
Musalman, describes the state of things pre-
vailing in Akbar's time, and his descriptionmirrors the sore uneasiness under which
every religious Musalman of the day was suf-
fering. Mulla Badayuni says that the Emperorwanted to win over his Hindu subjects. He,therefore, turned his face against Islam.
1 Hestarted encouraging 'Ulama'-i-Su (^ -Ux), i.e.,the worldly divines, who would do every-thing to win his favour. He managed tosurround himself with people who really didnot believe in revelation and the religiouscode. To believe in revelation was consideredas Taqlid
2 or following authority blindly
a low kind of mentality and fit only for the
1 MX., Vol. II, p. 255.
*Taqlid ( J~$&* ) literally means to follow ; technically it
means acknowledging Ijma" ( ^U-^-0 and Qiyas (^US) of acompetent divine as the sources of Islam besides the Qur-5nand the Hadlth. Muqalhd (jJJL*) is one who believes in Ijma*and QiySs of some divine as the sources of IslSm as regards the
point not explicitly found in the Qur-Sn or the Hadlth. Ghair
2
18 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
uneducated and the illiterate. Nay, the
Emperor went further. He openly opposedIslam. He regarded the injunctions of Islamas temporary and irrational.
"In these days,
when reproach began to be cast upon thedoctrines of Islam and all questions relating
thereto, and ever so many wretches of Hindusand Hinduised Musalmans brought unmiti-
gated revilings on the Prophet ; and the
villainously irreligious 'Ulama' in their works
pronounced the Emperor to be infallible
and contenting themselves with mentioningthe unity of God, they next mentioned the
various titles of the Emperor, and did not
have the courage to mention the name ofthe Prophet (God be gracious to him and his
followers, and give them peace in defiance
of the liars) ; this was the state of thingswhich became the cause of general disgrace,and the seeds of depravity and disturbance
Muqallid ( O^JLt j* ) is one who denies IjmS' and QiySs as thesources of Islam and sticks to the Qui-Sn and the Hadith.
MujaddicCs Conception of Tawhid 19
began to sprout out in the empire. Besides
this the mean people of the higher and lowerclasses, having put the collar of spiritual obe-
dience to the Emperor upon their necks, pro-fessed themselves to be his disciples."
* The
Emperor had ceased to believe in the Qur-an ;he did not believe in life after death, nor in
the Day of Judgment.2 He had gone further.
He had determined publicly to use the for-mula U OtXaEX**) and the same act if performed before kings isSajda'-i-Ta'?lml (
20 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
made compulsory before the Emperor.1
Wine was declared lawful,2 and bacon wasmade an ingredient of wine ;
3
Jizya4or the
military tax was abolished5 and beef was
declared unlawful.6
Pigs and dogs were spe-
cially reared and regarded as manifestations of
God.7 The Salat (V-) or the prescribedprayers, the Saum ( o* ) or the prescribedfasts and the Hajj or pilgrimage to Mecca
were abolished.8 The Islamic calendar was
replaced by the new-fangled Ilahi months and
years.9 Indeed Islam after a thousand years
was considered to have played itself out;
the study of Arabic was looked upon as if it
MT., Vol. II, p. 259.
Ibid., p. 301.3Ibid., p. 302.
*Jizya ( ou fa. ) is the military tax collected from the unbe-
lievers to maintain the Army for their protection.5 MT., Vol. II, p. 276.
Ibid., p. 305.
J&ui
Ibid., p. 306.9Ibid.
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 21
were something unlawful; the Law of Islamor Fiqh, Tafsir or the exegesis of the Qur-anand Hadlth or the traditions of the Prophetwere ridiculed; and those who prosecutedthese studies were looked down as deservingof contempt.
1
The Adhan ( c>W ) or call to the prayers, andthe Namaz-i-Jama
k
at ( ^*U- jUo ) or congre-gational prayers which used to be, as prescribed
by Islam, offered five times a day in the state
hall were stopped.2 Such names as Ahmad,
Muhammad and Mustafa, the various names ofthe Prophet of God, had become offensive to
the Emperor, and to utter them was a crime.3
Mosques and prayer rooms were changed in-
to store-rooms and into Hindu guardrooms.4
Islam was in great distress. Unbelievers
could openly ridicule and condemn Islam and
the Musalmans. The rites of Hinduism were' MT., Vol. II, pp. 306-307.
/W.,p.314.'Ibid.4Ibid., p. 322.
22 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
celebrated in every street and corner, while
Musalmans were not permitted to carry out
the injunctions of Islam. The Hindus when
they observed fast could compel the Musal-
mans not to eat and drink in public, while
they themselves could eat and drink publicly
during Ramadan. At several places Musalmanshad to pay with their lives for sacrificing the
cow on Id-al-Adha. A number of mosqueswere destroyed by Hindus and temples erected
in their place.1
Thus the times cried for the appearance of a
great reformer. Shaikh Ahmad was a spiritualman and at the age of forty, i.e., in the year1011 A.H., he felt the call. He had the ins-piration that he was the Renewer of the
second millennium of the Islamic era.3 But
the task before him was stupendous. Longhe worked, and strenuous and constant were
the efforts he made to turn the tide. Some
*M.. Vol.II.Ep.92.* Sec foot-note 1, p. 2, supra.
MujaddicTs Conception of Tawhid 23
of the means he adopted for this purpose were
the following :
Firstly, he prepared a number of his disciplesfor the work and sent them in all directionsto preach the true Islam, to emphasise the
Ittiba'-i-Sunnat (*-* ^USl) or following the
example of the Holy Prophet, and to bring the
people back to the folds of the Shari'at. This
work was effectively done, not only in India
but even beyond its borders in the neigh-
bouring Muslim countries.1
Secondly, he started a vast correspondence
with men of eminence in various parts of thesecountries. These epistles were widely circu-
lated. They expounded religious truths, and
laid the greatest emphasis on Ittiba*-i-Sunnat.a
Thirdly, he enlisted the great nobles of the
Imperial Court as his disciples and used them
to bring about a change in the life of those
1
RQ., Part I, pp. 166-67.
For example M., Vol. I, Eps. 25, 36, 41, 42, 44, 75, 79, 114,
152. 165, 195, 249, 254, 255, 272.
24 Mujaddid's Conception of Taivhid
circles, and to influence the Emperor towards
a change of heart.1
Fourthly, when Akbar died and Jahanglrsucceeded, the Shaikh started a campaign.
People had to take a vow that they will not
obey any orders contradictory to Islam. This
campaign was extended also to army.2
Asaf Jah, the prime minister, advised
Jahanglr to take care of Shaikh Ahmad whoseinfluence was spreading widely in India, Iran,
Turan and Badakhshan. He advised himfurther to stop the soldiers of the army from
visiting the disciples of the Shaikh and takingthe vow, and still further to imprison the
Shaikh. Jahanglr issued the orders and ShaikhAhmad became a political suspect. Jahanglralso decided to send the Shaikh to prison. But
it was not easy to lay hands on him. The greatnobles revered him and were devoted to him.
'M., Vol., I, Eps. 23, 25, 43-54, 65-72, 119-21, 191, 194, 195,
198, 209, 214, 228, 231, 238, etc.
'RQ., Parti, pp. 170-74
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 25
So Jahangir sent them one by one to distant
places Khan-i-Khanan to Deccan, Sadr-i-
Jahan to the East, Khan-i-Jahan to Malwa,
Khan-i-A'zam to Gujrat, and Mahabat Khanto Kabul. Having done this he sent for Shaikh
Ahmad from Sirhind and accused him of pub-lishing certain un-Islamic ideas in his Epistles.
But the Shaikh met the accusations squarely.
Jahangir had now to find some other excuse.He demanded Sajda (oix*u*) or prostration ofthe Shaikh. The Shaikh would not agree to
it, because Sajda is exclusively due to Godand to no one else. Thereupon Jahanglr
imprisoned the Shaikh and sent him to the
Gwalior Fort, where he remained a prisonerfor two years.
1 This imprisonment of the
Shaikh greatly annoyed Mahabat Khan in
Kabul and he expunged the name of Jahangirfrom the Khutba (+~^-) or Friday sermon
and the coin in Kabul, and invaded India
with his chosen army. It is narrated that1
RQ., Part I, pp. 175-186. Cf. TJ.. p. 273.
26 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
he virtually took JahangJr a prisoner at
Jhelum. Mahabat might have gone further.
But the Shaikh sent him instructions to obeythe King and to cause no disturbance in the
realm. Thereupon Mahabat set Jahangirfree. Soon after followed the release of the
Shaikh from Gwalior (1028 A.H.). The
Emperor wished the Shaikh to see him. The
Shaikh would not come unless certain condi-
tions were accepted. Firstly, that the Emperorwould abolish Sajda-i-Ta
l
zimi or prostration ;
secondly, that all the mosques that had been
erased should be erected ; thirdly, that all
orders prohibiting cow-slaughter should be
cancelled; fourthly, that Qadls, Muftis and
censors should be appointed to enforce the
Islamic code; fifthly, that Jizya or military
tax should be re-introduced ; sixthly, that
all bid'at ( OUoo ) or innovations should be
stopped and injunctions of the Sharfat or
Law be enforced; and seventhly, that allprisoners who had been sent to prison
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 27"
in contravention of the above should be
released.1
The Emperor accepted these conditions.2
When the Shaikh came to him, the Emperorreceived him with great honour, giving him aNadhr ( j** ) or monetary offering as well as aKhil'at 3 (cxx^) Or robe of honour.4 Hence-forth the Shaikh, for the remaining six yearsof his life, became the special Adviser of the
Emperor.5
1RQ., Part I, pp. 186-95.
'Ibid., p. 193.
TJ.,p.273.* Mirza Hadl, the writer of Tuzuk-i-
28 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
HIS ACHIEVEMENTS
THUS, in the first place, the Mujaddid broughtthe Islamic kingdom of India back to Islam.
In the second place, be induced the divines
of Islam to the study of Qur-an and Hadith,
which they had neglected so long. In Tasaw-
wuf or mysticism he revolutionised thedoctrine of Islamic mystics, questioned their
pantheism, and brought them round to Ittiba*-
i-Sunnat (following the example of the
Prophet). Moreover, he widened the bounds
of religious experience, by realising and des-
cribing a large number of higher stages yetuntraversed and unknown to his predeces-sors.
1 Further he made a fundamental depar-ture from the accepted mystic doctrine
inasmuch as he propounded that Wilayator sainthood is essentially different from
>M., Vol. II, Eps. 4, 6.
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 29
Nabuwwat l or Prophethood and not in oneline with it indeed qualitatively different.
3
Connected with this is the position which
the Shaikh established and which had longbeen perverted, viz., the Din or Religion and
not Suluk-wa-Tasawwuf 3 or mysticism is the
1 Nabuwwat( dj^o ) means prophecy from which comes
the word Prophet. But in Islam it means the stage where a
man becomes, in contradistinction to WilSyat by sheer graceof God, the subject of special divme favour and messagesfor the guidance of man are sent to him by God. Wilayat
( ,_^o^L ) is that stageof spiritual development in which the
mystic realises that he has attained to nearness or proximity to
God. Everyone can get to it by dint of his continued effort and
struggle, though not without the grace of God.8 M., Vol. I, Ep. 260.3 Suluk
( viT^X*** )is the method of spiritual development. The
thing has been conceived as a journey or pilgrimage to God,similarly Sair (^**) which means rambling. When Suluk is
attained at a certain stage the my&tic begins to experience the
adumbrations of Asma'-o-Shuyun (^j^Jl* 3 *U*1 ) i.e. divine
names and phases. This is called Sair-ila-'llah (
30 MujaddicTs Conception of Tawhid
indispensable thing for a Muslim.1
It is for these great reforms that he was
called Mujaddid-i-Alf-i-Thanl the Reformer
of the second millennium. Henceforth weshall speak of him in the text as the Mujad-did.
he resumes his duties as an ordinary human being in consonancewith the teachings of Shari'at and directs his energies like the
Prophets to the reformation of his fellow beings.
>M., Vol. I, Ep. 48.
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 31
HIS INFLUENCE
IT may be added here that the Mujaddid'sinfluence on subsequent development too has
been very great. His was really the call" Bach
to Muhammad " ; and it had had far-reachingconsequences. Besides his conception of
Tawhid which shall be considered in the
following pages, this call inherently affected
the Islamic mind and gave it a new turn in
mysticism as well as in theology, -llm-i-Batin
and 'Ilm-i-Zahir.1
Firstly, with regard to mysticism, there
arose a new yearning a yearning to purify1 'Ilm-i-Zahir (y*^^*) is knowledge in general, such as
Tafsir, Hadlth, Fiqh and 'Ilm-i-Kal5m. llm-i-Bstm ( al>L> ^ )is cognition attained through mystic efforts. Hence the dis-
tinction of 'Ulama'-i-Z5hir, those well versed in learning, theo-
logians and jurists, who are guided by the word of the Qur-Sn,etc., and not the spirit as the initiated or the mystics who aretherefore called 'UlamS'-i-Batin, who try to have the direct
experience of God and eternity.
32 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
mysticism from extraneous elements and
draw it exclusively from that pure and peren-nial fountain-head from which Islam had
arisen ; in other words, a yearning to learn it
directly from the Prophet of God. Accord-
ingly it happened that Khwaja Mir Nasir1
who belonged to the Mujaddid's school of
mysticism got into a trance which lasted for
3 full week, and Imam Hasan, the grandsonof the Prophet himself, appeared to him in
his cell and initiated him into a new mysticmethod, insisting that the method shall be
called after the Prophet, 'Muhammadi,' because
that was the genuine method of the Prophet
1
Khwaja Mir Nasir 'Andalib (d. 1172 A.H )L was a linealdescendant of the celebrated saint Khwaja Bahauddin, thefounder of Naqshbandia order. In the beginning Khwaja Mir
Nasir was a soldier in the Mughal Army. All of a sudden heleft the army and took to seclusion He became a celebratedmystic. Indeed he founded a new order of mysticism called
the Tariqa-i-MuhammadI ( ^J^-a^.^ s&OjJa) or the method
of Muhammad. He wrote a voluminous book Nala'-i-'Andalib
( w^J^Xx* v)U ) m 1153 A.H. in the form of a story in whichhe discussed most of the mystic doctrines.
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 33
of God. When the trance was over theKhwaja came out of his cell, and the first
person whom he initiated in the new methodwas his son Khwaja Mir Dard
1 who met himon the threshold.2
The father and son have written volumin-ous books on the method which they believeto have been the work of inspiration.
3 Theessence of the method is : " Break away from
everyone and attend only to your master
(Muhammad) and continue to attend on himincessantly."
4It is, say they, the want of this
principle that has created dissensions amongst
'KhwSja Mir Dard (1131-1190 A.H.) was the second son of
Khwaja Mir Nasir. At the age of fifteen he wrote a treatise
Asrar-us-Salat ( bl^LoJl j\j~>\ ) He is the author of severalworks on mysticism, e.g., USandat-i-Dard ( >j> ^\>j\j ), "llm-
ul-Kitdb ( v-->lX$Jl ^X ), etc. He was held in great esteem andeven the Mughal Emperor Shah 'Alam used to visit his Majlis
( ^A*.Xsxxo ) or gathering every month. Khwaja Dard was also a
famous poet of Urdu and has a recognised position in the historyof Urdu literature.
2IK., p. 85
/feu*., pp. 91, 954Ibid., p. 87.
3
34 Mujaddtd's Conception of Tawhid
Musalmans. Go back to Kitab-o-Sunnat,1 the
Qur-an and the example of the Prophet, and
attach yourself exclusively to the Prophet.
That is the right course.2
Similar is it with Shah Sayyid Ahmad
Barelwi.3 He belonged to the school of
1 Kitab ( L_-Ax ) literally means' book
'
Technically it means
the Qur-an and the injunction of the Qur-an. Sunnat literallymeans habit , technically it means the Prophet's mode of habitual
actions, or the Prophet's example Hence Kitab-o-Sunnat means
the injunctions of the Qur-an and the example ot the Prophet2IK., p 87
'Shah Sayyid Ahmad Barelwi (1201-1246 A H ) From earlychildhood he was mystically minded and felt in himself a strong
propensity to follow only the Prophet After some education
at Lucknow, he went to Delhi, where he became a disciple of
Shah 'Abdul 'Aziz However, he broke away from Shah 'Abdul
'Aziz on the practice of Tasawwur-i-Shaikh ( ^-^**> jy** ),
picturing the Shaikh in imagination, which he regarded as
idolatry, and pursued his spiritual development single-handed.The progress he made was immense, indeed Shah 'Abdul 'Azizhimself wished to become his disciple m the end Soon hisreputation spread far and wide MawlwT 'Abdul Hayy andSh3h IsmS'Il, two eminent relations of Shah 'Abdul 'Aziz joinedhim Thousands of Muslims adopted his views, and he was
everywhere hailed as the true Khalifa. One of his biographers,Mawlwl 'Abdul Ahad, asserts that more than 40,000 Hindusand unbelievers became converts to Islam through his preach-ings In 1232 A.H. Shah Sayyid Ahmad set out from his native
MujaddicTs Conception of Tawhid 35
the Mujaddid and has a very high place
amongst the mystics of Islam. The Sayyidbelieved that he had a special affinity to the
Prophet and that he got spiritual guidance
directly from him or from God.1 He turns
round and sets up a new method, which he
city on a pilgrimage to Mec ca, staying a few months at Calcuttaon the way. Two years later, on his return to India, he startedmaking active preparation for Jihad or religious war on the Sikhs
of the Punjab to rescue the Mubalmans of that province fromtheir tyranny. He made campaign after campaign against theSikhs and died a martyr fighting at the battle of Bal5kot in the
year 1246 A H1 In mystic terminology to get guidance direct from the
spirituality of the Prophet is called Uwaisiyyat ( Ov^*o^l ).The term comes from Uwais It is believed that Uwais gotspiritual guidance direct from the Holy Prophet, that he couldnever meet him The Mujaddid regaids himself to be an Uwaisi
( t^***-?.^ ), and it ib remarkable that after him a large number
of mystics have claimed themselves to be Uwaisis In our
times too there was a mystic of great eminence, Hajl SayyidW5nth 'All Shah (d 1321 AH), about whom it is said that hereceived spiritual guidance directly from a'imma'-i-alil-i-bait
(C^o tJ-fcl v/^~^)> the grandsons of the Prophet.Prof. F. Krenkow doubts the mysterious personality of
Uwais-al-Qaram, which is supposed and claimed as the origina-tion of Sufism, and is convinced that such person never existed
in reality. Imam Malik b. Anas (d. 179 A.H.) is the first
36 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
calls, Tarlqa-i-Nabuwwatlor the Prophetical
Method. Other methods are according to him
only Tarlqaha-i-Wilayat or mystical methods.2
The peculiarity of the new method is that the
mystic should first make all his actions conform
strictly to the law given by the Prophet ;s
and only then take to*
Dhikr and Fikr\ re-
membrance and contemplation. The dhikr4
who heard of him and doubted his real existence. The biogra-phies of Uwais are not convincing at all
'Tariqa-i-Nabuwwat ( O^-o AAO Jo ) is that method of
spiritual development which aims at developing only those
values which the the Holy Prophet aimed at. Tariqa-i-Wil3yat
( OoM^ vOjl> ) is the method of mystic development, used bymystics of Islam, and aimed at cultivating mystical mode of life.The difference is that of being according to Shari'at or in-different to it
'SM., p 8
'Ibid., p. 144.
4 Dhikr (j* ) is commemoration. In it Asma'-o-Sifat, thenames and attributes of God, are recited, which is a help in the
progress of the mystic Shughl is the practicing of dhikr.
ghughl-i-Nafl (^ J^ ) is the dhikr of vAJIM. denial ofeverything other than God, and Shughl-i-Ithbat (C->L*Jl
is the dhikr of dSMI, the affirmation of God. Fikr
is distinguished from Muraqiba (*^*^^*). It is in general the
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 37
of the method consists in reading the Qur-anand reciting the prayers which the Prophetused to recite ;
1 while the fikr of the method
consists in contemplation on the Goodness
and Grace of God which is so profusely spreadabout us, and in making our will wholly sub-
ordinate to His Will, and in realising His
omnipresence at every moment, etc.2 The
most beneficial aid to all this, according to
this method, is tXat the mystic should take
to the service of his fellow-beings.3 Shah
Sayyid Ahmad denies pantheism and believesin theism.
4 He puts Sahw or sobriety aboveSukr or spiritual intoxication. He preachesJihad or fighting in the way of God in placeof Sima' ( ^U ) or music-hearing for the sake
of ecstasy, and demands social service instead
contemplation of the Sifat-I-Ilahl ( ^^^ OU-o ), attributes ofAllah. Muraqiba is the concentrated contemplation.
1 SM., pp. 148-149.
Ubid., pp. 154-157.
/W. t pp. 20-24.4/&*., pp. 45-46.
38 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
of solitude. He punctiliously follows Kitab-o-Sunnat, Qur-an and the example of the
Prophet, and strenuously and emphaticallydenounces bid'at or innovations.1 That is whyhe rose, organised the Musalmans and raised
the standard of Jihad or the holy war againstthe Sikhs who were subjecting Musalmans inthe Punjab to religious persecution. He foughtlong and fought valiantly and was himself
killed in Jihad (1246 A.H.) ; and with him
was killed also Shah Isma'll Shahid who washis chief lieutenant.
2
Secondly, the call of the Mujaddid induced
theologians, those learned in the religious lore,
to turn to the Hadith. Before the Mujaddid
religious learning consisted wholly of juris-
prudence or Fiqh. But the Mujaddid turned
the tide to the Kitab-o-Sunnat or Qur-an
and the Prophet. People started learning the
Hadith or Tradition, and Shah Wall-Ullah
1 SM., pp. 45-46.
'SA., pp. 142-150.
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 391
established the first school of Hadith in India.
With Shah Sayyid Ahmad Barelwi the schoolturned into Ahl-i-Hadith l or Traditionists
which yet had room for mystic element in it.Later the emphasis fell against Taqlid or
blind following of the authority of the juristsand there arose Ghair Muqallidin or pureand simple Ahl-i-Hadith or strict traditionists.
In this connection we may also speak of thereform and High Criticism inaugurated by Sir
Sayyid Ahmed Khan.2 Sir Sayyid emphasisedthe criticism of the Hadith and forcibly direct-ed attention to the Kitab or the Qur-an as the
1Ahl-i-Hadith ( vjio J^. J-*\ ) : Those who follow only the
Hadith or sayings and doings of the Prophet and not the schoolof Islamic jurists. All great collectors of Hadith really belongto this school of thought. But it became a sect in the hands of'Abdul Wahhab of Nejd (d. 1201 A.H ) and took its root in Indiawith the followers of Shah Sayyid Ahmad Barelwi (d. 1246 A.H.)and his chief lieutenant Shah IsmS'Il Shahid (d. 1246 A.H.).Ahl-i-Qur-dn : Those who follow only the Qur-an and discardthe Hadith also along with Fiqh or jurists.
1Sir Sayyid Ahmad Khan (1232-1315 A.H.) came of a family
connected with the Delhi Court. The fall of the Mughal
40 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
real source of Islam. This in the long run
gave rise to the sect of the Ahl-i-Qur-an or
Quranists instituted by Mawlwi 'Abdullah.1
Sir Sayyid was brought up in the school of
the Mujaddid. His conception of Tawhid or
divine unity is theistic ;a and with reference
to mysticism he went further and clearly an-
nounced that mysticism is nothing more than
a way of purifying the soul and the morals3
something which was implicit in the teach-
ings of the Mujaddid, but which had not come
Empire in 1857 A D set him thinking , and he took to the workof the reform of the Musalma'ns of India. At last in 1875 A.D.he founded the present Ahgarh Muslim University. Sir Sayyid,as he is generally called, has exerted a great formative influence ;
indeed there is hardly any movement of importance religious,political, social, educational and literary amongst the Musal-
m5ns of India which is not directly or indirectly traceable to him.1 Mawlwi 'Abdullah Chakralwi (d. 1334 A.H ). He was a
great scholar of the Qur-an, and in the beginning of the present
century of the Christian era founded the sect of Ahl-i-Qur-5n.He maintains that Qur-5n and Qur-3n alone is the genumesource for all Islamic dogmatics, and that neither QiySs nor
Ijm3' nor even Hadith has any authority3TfA., Vol. I, p. 156.
9Ibid., pp. 78-91.
MajaddicTs Conception of Tawhid 41
to clear consciousness.1 Later Sir Muhammad
Iqbal2also protested against Wahdat-i-Wujud
of the mystics, gave Islamic morality a new
spirit and preached life of Effort and Activity.3
Now, Tawhid is the Problem on which the
Mujaddid has deservingly laid the greatest
emphasis and made great and original contri-
1
M., Vol. I, Eps. 207, 217.2Sir Muhammad Iqbal (1294-1357 A.H ) was a great poet,
philosopher and scholar. Since he wrote his Asr5r-i-KhudI
about 1333 A.H , he became a force which modified the trend ofMuslim thought in politics and morals He attacked mysticismfor its doctrines of
' Fana'
or self-annihilation, and substituted4 Khudi
'
or self-affirmation in its place. He also objected toWahdat-i-Wu]ud or umtyism.
3Cf. IqbaTs poems Asr5r-i-Khudi ( v3^*- ^j~*\ ) an^^ )**}}Asrar-i-Khudi (Secrets of Self) : In this Dr. Iqbal denounces
mysticism as un-Islamic in its origin and injurious to the
national and political life of Musalm3ns.
Rumuz-i-Bikhudi (Secrets of Selflessness) : In it he lays
emphasis on the life according to the Qur-Sn and the Sunnat,and preaches such morals as are more positive.
42 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
butions. Thereby he has undermined the
whole structure of mysticism in its very
foundations, viz., its pantheism. It is this
conception in the Mujaddid which I have
chosen as the theme of this Dissertation.
The Dissertation is divided into four
parts :
Introduction develops the abstract forms of
the Unity of the World-Principle ascon-
ceived by the Speculative and the ReligiousConsciousnesses in their distinctions; and
shows how these distinctions tend to be obli-terated in Mystic Consciousness.
Chapter I describes the Mujaddid's con-
ception of Tawhid in contrast to and criticism
of Ibn 'Arabfs Pantheistic conception.
Chapter II traces how the conception ofthe Mujaddid was received amongst the mys-tics of Islam.
The Conclusion brings out that the pan-theistic conception of Tawhid is a case of the
transformation of the religious unity into the
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 43-
speculative unity, or rather the case of the
identification of the two unities ; that the
MujaddicTs conception of Tawhid is in con-sonance with the religious consciousness, and
that the attempts made by the successors ofthe Mujaddid to re-affirm the pantheistic
conception of Tawhid are neither based ondirect experience nor are they conclusive as
rational arguments.
INTRODUCTION
Unity of the World-Principle
MAN takes different attitudes towards theobjects of his experience. These atti-
tudes are called different forms of conscious-
ness. Theoretic consciousness is the attitude
which he takes towards the world of objects in
order to acquire its knowledge ; and epistemo-
logy or logic is the science that studies the
nature and implications of this consciousness.
Moral consciousness is another attitude that
man takes he takes it towards mankind ; andethics or moral philosophy is the science that
deals with the laws that arise in this field and
the implications thereof. Similarly religious
consciousness is the attitude that man takestowards ultimate reality ; and
k
theistic*
or
46 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
philosophy of religion is the branch of
knowledge that studies the nature and impli-cations of this consciousness.
These various forms of consciousness have
definite limits, and they are valid only within
such limits. But there are cases in which the
various forms of consciousness seem to over-
lap or conflict with each other. It is for philo-
sophy to consider the limits of these various
forms with a view to avoid their overlappingand conflict, and to trace the error lyingtherein. Further it has to determine the exact
sense in which each is valid. The unity ofthe world-principle is a case of this kind.
The theoretical and the religious conscious-
nesses seem to overlap on this point.The theoretical or the speculative conscious-
ness is, as said above, the knowledge-attitude
of man. It has an ideal of knowledge. It
yearns to realise that ideal. This ideal consists
in having a unified picture of the universe. It
consists in finding out a unitary principle, out
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 47
of which could spring all the multiplicity of
the world from which the multiplicity could
be deduced. Such unity has been hoveringbefore the gaze of every metaphysician. The
yearning for it is so intense that the specula-
tive consciousness is strongly inclined to go
forward and assert the existence of this unity ;
indeed it would go still further and grasp the
essence of it also. The efforts made in this
direction have different forms resulting from
the different tendencies of the thinkers whohave tried to determine this unity. The
empirically-minded start from the side of the
objects of experience, i.e., the multiplicity.
They want to seek some empirical object which
may be used as a principle of unity formingthe basis of all existence. Thales seeks this
concrete unity in'
water ', which he finds to
be the principle of all things; Anaximander
finds it in'
matter undetermined'
; Anaxi-
menes in * air '. Democritus finds such a
unity in particles of physical things, i.e.,'
atoms
48 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
and void '. The British school of empiricistsfinds it in
'
ideas and sensations '. Each of
them tries to show that the essence of thingsconsists in these entities. Now, these entities,when taken to serve as principles of unity, are
really concepts. Each of these attempts is,
therefore, an attempt to conceive the unity
as a concept from which the multiplicity is
deduced. For the unity in each case is not
something which exists over and above and
beside the multiplicity that is deduced from
it, but only as a general idea or concept. The
rationalistically-minded thinkers held that
thought and being are essentially one ; or that
thought is the essence of being. They seek
the principle of unity expressly in a concept
or a system of concepts from which every-
thing could be deduced logically. Parmanides
finds that such a concept is 'Being'; Plato
finds it inv
Ideas'
or'
Idea of the Good ' ;Aristotle in pure
' Form '. Spinoza regards*
Substance'
to be such a concept, and Hegel
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 49
*Absolute Idea
'
which absorbs the whole
system of categories in itself. Both these
tendencies agree in the assumption that there
is some such principle of unity and that thingscan be deduced from such a principle. But
critical philosophy denies that. Kant comes
to the conclusion that Unity is only a4
Regulative Idea \ We cannot affirm itsobjectivity we cannot maintain that the
principle of the world is one. As a*
Regula-
tive Idea \ it is only helpful in our attempt to
construct a unified system of knowledge ; and
as such it consists in this that we should goon making attempt after attempt to discover
a law from which all other laws could be
deduced or expressed as its modes ; thoughwe know that we can never fully succeed inthis attempt.
On the other hand a unitary principle isthe very mainstay of the religious conscious-
ness. The religious consciousness is that
attitude of man which he takes towards the
50 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
Ultimate Reality. But how does religiousconsciousness conceive this principle ? Now,what is the religious situation ? Man findshimself confronted in his course with insur-
mountable obstacles. On the one side standshe with his innate yearning after harmonywith reality, after moral perfection and happi-
ness, after knowledge and after beauty. On theother stands the universe, stupendous, dark
and brutal, full of sin and ugliness, unamen-
able to harmony with his moral and spiritual
yearnings, and unwilling to accede to the
demands of his soul. He finds himself help-less forlorn. There must be a Being whohas the power, as well as the will, to help
him, if he is to be rescued. Hence it is that
religious consciousness affirms the existence
of such a Being. He can help him in hisnatural wants and can guide him to the
right path. He is Rabb or the Providence,and Razzaq or the Sustainer; and He isRahman or the Beneficent, for He accedes
Mujaddids Conception of Tawhid 51
to his natural wants. He is Hadi or theGuide, for He guides him to the rightcourse; and He is Ghafur-ur-Rahlm or thePardoner and the Merciful, Who can give himrelief relief from the unbearable burden of
his sins and sinful nature. But He can trulyhelp him only if He knows all facts open orhidden, past or future. Therefore He is Sami'-um-Baslr or the Hearer and the Seer, and
'Alim-ul-ghaib wash-shahada or the Omnis-
cient. Further He must have power to do allHe likes ; He is Qadir or the Powerful andFa"al-ul lima-yurld the Accomplisher of all
He might wish : the Omnipotent. But such
power He can have only if He is the Creatorl
of the world and man. Therefore He is
1 Because if things exist or have come into existence indepen-dently of His Will, a limit is set thereby to His Power by their
nature ; His control over them and over the events of the uni-
verse does not remain complete He thereby ceases to performthe function for the sake of which His existence was postulated.That is, He cannot satisfy the religious consciousness unlessHe is also the Creator, Khaliq ( o^UL ) and BSrI
52 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
Khaliq and Ban or the Creator. Moreover
He must have the supreme will to lead himto perfection ; He is Dhul-fadl il-
4
azlm, the
most Gracious. He must consequently Him-self be perfectly Good, He is Quddus orthe Holy. His help is grace. Man cannotclaim it as his right. When man realises hisown helplessness and the power of this Being,he is filled with awe and devotion, and be-
seeches Him for help and guidance. He isMa'bud or the Object of worship, and Mujib-ud-da'wat or the Answerer of human prayers.The further implication that dawns on
Religious Consciousness, in view of the supre-
macy of this Being and the exclusiveness of
the right of devotion to Him, is that He isOne, He is Ahad or the One, and Samad orthe Self-sufficient who needs nothing and towhom recourse is had in every need. Theseare the attributes of the Unity which religiousconsciousness affirms in relation to us, and
which we understand and know. But in Him-
MujaddicTs Conception of Tawhid 53
self in His entirety and His essence, we donot know Him : UJ> ^ 0^*2*^. ^ by cognitionthey cannot comprehend Him; nor can we
comprehend Him by analogy, for in His essence
nothing is like unto Him : cr^ *^* ^~^there is nothing like unto Him. With thismuch of positive and negative knowledge ofHim the religious consciousness is satisfied.Now, it is of paramount importance to
realise the inherent differences between
these two unities the speculative and the
religious. In the nature of the case it would
appear that :
Firstly, the speculative unity is unqualita-
tive, while the religious unity must necessarily
be qualitative, i.e., of a certain nature. The
empirically-minded thinkers sought the prin-
ciple of unity in"water ", in
"matter undeter-
mined ", in "air ", in"atoms ", in "ideas ", in
"sensations ", in some existent entity. The
rationalists found it in"Being ", in
"Idea of
the Good'1
, in" Form ", in
"Substance ", in
54 MujaddicTs Conception of Tawhid
"Absolute Idea", in some concept. The
critical philosopher sought it in 'Abstract
Law '. This shows that the speculative con-sciousness is really indifferent to the nature of
the unity. It is satisfied if the ideal of unified
knowledge is realised. It is all the same to it
whether the unity is water or air, atom or
idea, matter or mind, conscious or uncon-
scious, mechanical or teleological. It may be
of any quality whatsoever, or it may be even
qualitiless. The only quality it should possessis that it should be such that from it the
multiplicity could be logically deduced. The
speculative consciousness is not even keen
that it should be numerically one. It may be
one in number or it may be many.But the religious consciousness is in dead
earnest exactly with regard to the nature of
the unity. The unity must be Rabb and
Razzaq, Providence and Sustainer, and it
must be Rahman or Beneficent; further itmust be GhafUr-ur-Rahim or the Pardoner
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 55
and the Merciful, and it must be Hadi
or Guide. Moreover, it must be 'Alim-ul-
ghaib wash-shahada or the Knower of the
Open and the Hidden, and it must be Fa"al-ul
lima-yurid or the Doer of whatever He choosesto do. It must further be Khaliq and Barl or
the Creator of the Universe,1 and Quddus or
the Holy, and Dhul Fadl or the Gracious. Andmore, it must have the exclusive right of
devotion to itself from man, i.e., it must be
the only Ma'bud or the Object of worship ;and it must be one numerically one or Ahad.
Indeed, the religious consciousness is so keen
1Creation means bringing something into being out of com-
plete nothing. This conception, however, is a stumbling block
for the speculative consciousness, because such a coming into
being is absolutely inconceivable. The speculative conscious-ness, therefore, must stop in its logical regress at some beingor Wujud, from which it could, by modification, deduce theactual world order. It cannot conceive that a substance can
come into being ab novo. About accidents or equalities of thesubstance it does not seem to be so sceptical, new qualitiesdo come into being as a matter of fact. But in its purity inits rigour, the speculative consciousness does yearn to deduce
^ven qualities from the primordial essence of the substanceicf. Scientific Materialism).
56 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
on the nature of the unity that it yearnseven for the oneness of the unity only because
of its attributes. It is rather the attributes
that demand that the unity in question should
be numerically one, for then and then alone
can it give the satisfaction for which it has
been postulated.
Secondly, the speculative unity must natu-
rally be immanent while on the contrary the
religious unity must be transcendent. That
the speculative unity is immanent means that
it does not exist over and above the multipli-
city but only in multiplicity which indeed is
only a form and modification of it. Empiri-
cally conceived, the unity is some existential
being, e.g.,'
water ',4
air ',4
matter undeter-
mined \* atom \ The unity here is really
only of concept. It does not exist over and
above existing things. It is wholly exhausted
in its denotation. Rationalistically conceived r
it is evidently an abstract concept, e.g., the*
Being'
of Parmenides. It has only conceptual
MujaddicTs Conception of Tawhid 57
being: it has no existence of its own. It
becomes fact only in things, because they are
conceived as its instances. Even criticallyconceived, the unity is only a conceptual
principle, a law. As such it is abstract; ithas no being of its own, and it exists only in
its applications. Thus the speculative form of
unity in all its three kinds is such that it is
nothing other than the unity of an abstract
concept ; in no case it is the unity of an
existent being. The concept however either
has no being at all, i.e., in the sense of exis-
tence ; or if it has one, it is exhausted in the
being of the instances to which it applies.Thus the speculative unity, if it exists at all,is necessarily immanent.
On the contrary the religious unity mustbe transcendent. It must necessarily be over
and above the world and man. It must be
wholly an other. Because the despair of manamidst the obstacles that originate in his ownnature and those that originate in the nature
58 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
of the world around him, demands that helpshould come from a source which is other
than the sources of his troubles, and which
has full control over the whole world of menand things. Indeed this succour from the
source over and above the world is the very
purpose for which religious consciousness
postulates the existence of such a Being.
That is why religious unity is necessarilytranscendent.
Thirdly, the speculative unity is necessarily
monistic, while the religious unity is dualistic.
In connection with immanence and transcen-
dence it has in general been brought out above
that the speculative unity has no being over
and above the multiplicity. This is monism ;for it means that the one and the many haveno separate existences. But it means more ; it
means that only the one exists, and that the
many have no existence by the side of the one.Now the speculative unity is of this nature ;for speculative consciousness is out to con-
Mujaddids Conception of Tawhid 59
ceive the world as one or as differentiation of
the one. So far it is qualitative monism. But
at a certain stage speculative consciousness is
not satisfied with mere qualitative monism ; it
will also be quantitative monism, the Real is
one, single, individual ; it is numerically one.
At that stage the unity is conceived either asa whole, or as a substance or as a spirit. But
the whole, one single, individual, does not
-exist over and above the parts, it is only the
organisation of the parts and is incapable of
existing in its own right. The position re-mains that of mere immanence. The unity is
consequently raised to the dignity of a subs-
tance. Now the many become only modesof the substance, its manifestations, its ad-
jectives ; they have no being of their own.
When the unity is conceived, not merelyas substance but as spirit, it is an Infinite
Spirit; and finite spirits are conceived as
numerically identical with it. They have
no being of their own ; while the material
60 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
world is conceived either as expressly unreal,
or together with the finite spirits as a re-
production or re-realisation of the Infinite
Spirit itself.1
But the religious unity must needs be dual-
istic. For the situation, that has given rise to
the postulating of the existence of a Divine
Being, is that man is disappointed with hisown self and the nature of the world. Neitherof them is capable of according any help to
him in his distress. He postulates the exis-tence of a spiritual Being. To be in harmonywith Him alone would enable him to realisehis yearnings. This implies that God on theone side, and the universe and man on the
other, must be fundamentally different in
nature. One is perfect, the other imperfect.
1It may, by the way, be remarked here that in putting the
emphasis on the reality of the one, on its self existence and its
supreme value, already the influence of the religious conscious-
ness is present, and where it leads further to the apparentaffirmation of the many as existent, as in Plato or Green, theaffirmation is made most grudgingly and the point is left obscure..
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 61
Both exist they exist side by side. One isother than the other. On the contrary, ifreligious unity were a whole, it would only be
an aspect or relation of the manifold ; it would
not exist in its own right, only the manifoldwould ; and if it were substance or spirit, the
world and man would only be immanent
expressions of and hence essentially, identical
with it, there would be no room for man asa separate existent and hence for the specific
religious yearnings ; for its object would be
already a realised fact or will necessarily be
realised without any ado and any kind of
external help. In that case there need indeed
be no religion or religious yearning. That is
why the religious consciousness cannot affordto be monistic ; it must be dualistic, it must
assert the existence of the imperfect on one
side and that of the Perfect on the other. It
cannot permit the evaporation of the one, or
of the other.
Fourthly, the religious unity must be
62 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
Personal, while speculative unity need not be
personal indeed it tends to be Impersonal.
Personality implies consciousness ; nay it
implies more, it implies self'-consciousness\
consciousness of itself as over and above as
other than something else, i.e. as transcending
them. But we can conceive a being who is
self-conscious, and yet it will hardly deserve
the name of personality unless it can determine
its own action according to the principles of
morality, i.e., unless it is free. Again, such a
being may be just absolutely just ; it may be
holy. But that is not enough ; it would then
be only the doctrine of" Karma " hypostatised.
We want more. It should be capable notonly of justice but also of grace. It is grace
which forms the distinctive feature of perso-
nality. A man who always gives you but yourdeserts, neither more nor less, will be regar-ded by you as lacking in personal elements.
Now, the religious consciousness seeks a unitywhich is eminently personal. It seeks that
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 63
the Divine Being should be aware of myactual condition ; and that it should be aware
of my yearnings ; more, it should have graceit should be capable of satisfying my yearningsin spite of my shortcomings in spite of myfailure to deserve what I yearn for. That
is to say, the religious unity must be fully
personal.
Not so the speculative consciousness. It is
not interested in personality. It wants only a
unity ; whether it is personal or impersonal is
immaterial to it. As brought out above in dis-
cussing immanence and transcendence, as well
as monism and dualism, speculative conscious-
ness has conceived its unity pre-eminently as
impersonal. So long as the unity is only a
qualitative one, the issue is clear. But whenit becomes a quantitative unity the whole,
the substance, the spirit, even there the specu-lative consciousness is not inclined to conceive
the unity as personal. As a whole, it may be
any kind of whole ; as a substance again it may
64 MujadduTs Conception of Tawhid
be any kind of substance. Indeed, as such, it is,
as in Spinoza and Schelling, something other
than self-conscious. Only as spirit it looks
like a person. Here it is the religious interest
that is at work. However, the attributing of
a kind of transcendence to that spirit turns out
to be nominal ; it loses itself in the demand,
inherent in speculative consciousness, for
immanence. The spirit is not other than
anything else, or no being is other than the
spirit. This makes self-consciousness doubt-
ful; hence the idealist is strongly inclined
to refuse personality to it. Moreover the
speculative consciousness is loath to ascribe
freedom to it, or it would interpret freedom
as identical with necessity ; for necessity alone
satisfies the demand of the speculative con-
sciousness ; indeed it yearns for unity and
necessity. With necessity there hardly remains
any room for grace. Thus all the elementsof personality are jeopardised by the require-ments of the speculative consciousness.
MujaddicTs Conception of Tawhid 65
Fifthly, the religious unity must be Free
absolutely free, and it must admit of moralfreedom for man ; while the speculative unityneed neither be itself free nor need it admit
of the freedom of man.
Freedom means, positively, the possessionof inherent independence in the object called
free to determine the mode of its activity ;and negatively, the absence of any kind of
external restraint or internal constraint on its
action. Religious consciousness conceives
the unity as a perfect Being. It must there-
fore be morally perfect, have grace, and be
self-sufficient. Now, morality necessarily in-volves freedom ; the Divine Being, if He ismorally perfect, must be fully free. Further
if He is to have grace, which is so inevitablydemanded by religious consciousness, He musthave freedom ; otherwise, if grace in its
various forms, viz., beneficence, sustenance,
guidance, mercy, forgiveness and reward, is a
necessity of His nature, then it will come to5
66 MujaddicTs Conception of Tawhid
us without yearning for it ; and more, it will
hardly deserve the name of grace, for it will
be from the moral standpoint of a lower kind
than the grace which even man is capable of
showing. Moreover, freedom is a require-ment of His Samadiyyat or Self-sufficiency.He does not need anything; not even theexhibition of any kind of attitude or action
towards other beings. What He does forman is, therefore, absolutely unselfish, andhence absolutely free. And there is room forthe freedom of man also, for man must be
free, if he is created by Him to yearn formoral perfection and to seek His grace.The speculative consciousness, on the con-
trary, yearns exactly for necessity, it would
have a unity from which all multiplicity could
be deduced rigorously. Hence there can be
no freedom in its unity, nor in the multipli-
city which proceeds from it. When thespeculative consciousness conceived the unity
as existent object, e.g., in materialism, etc., the
MujaddicTs Conception of Tawhid 67
unity is conceived as a cause, from which the
whole world process originates and proceedson the principle of mechanical causality.When it conceives the unity as a rationalconcept, e.g., the monism of Spinoza, the
principle on which it acts and on which the
multiplicity is derived from it is the principleof logical ground-consequence. When thespeculative consciousness seems to go further
and conceive the unity as a spirit, it has then
the appearance of affirming freedom in the
unity as well as in man. But then what is
really meant is only the want of external
constraint; and freedom is identified with
internal necessity, which in truth is no
freedom.
Sixthly, Immortality is another point which
is bound up for the religious consciousness
with its unity, but which is hardly of any
consequence from the standpoint of the
speculative unity.
The religious consciousness yearns for per-
68 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
faction perfection which is wanting in man,
and which to all appearances cannot be
attained by him in this short span of life ;nor by his own endeavours, unless the whole
system of reality is somehow transformed intoa new order. It is for this reason that
immortality as well as the existence of Divine
Being is postulated by it. The two are reallytwo phases of one and the same postulate,the former is the subjective condition and
the latter the objective condition of one and
the same requirement.But for the speculative consciousness both
these conditions are unnecessary. It neither
cares for a definite qualitative nature of the
unity, nor consequently for the survival of
human soul after death. This because it isnot the interest of the speculative conscious-
ness that the multiplicity, or indeed that the
unity, should have a particular nature. Its
problem is to find out the unity from which
the multiplicity as such could necessarily be
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 69
deduced. Hence it is that all the attemptsto determine the speculative unity and trace
the growth of multiplicity from it are in-
different as to the immortality of the humansoul. They are not only indifferent as to the
immortality of the human soul, they rather
strongly tend to deny it. If the unity is only
qualitative one, then too the soul is a transi-
tory mode of the substance. Its being is in
every case adjectival. Even when it seemsto attain to self-subsistence, as in idealism,
its survival after death is the survival of its
memory (or idea) in God or the survival ofthe element common to all the souls, i.e., their
general idea ; in every case it is re-absorbed
in God.
Seventhly, the speculative unity must be
absolutely knowable, while the religious unity
need not be knowdble at all.
The speculative unity has its origin in the
yearning to know reality. The speculative con-sciousness is knowledge consciousness. It
70 MujaddicTs Conception of Tawhid
assumes that reality is essentially knowable
by us. Hence when the empirically-mindedcomes to the task of metaphysics, he grasps
reality as fundamentally matter, material,
physical, as the direct object of immediate
perception ; or as sensations and ideas, psychi-
cal, mental, again as something which is
directly apprehended in introspection. The
world-picture that is thereby constructed is
materialism or subjective idealism.
While if the task is undertaken by the
rationalistically-minded, the world is grasped
as a system of concepts or categories, of that
which is the proper object of thought and can
be grasped by the intellect without remainder.
The world-picture thus produced is idealism,etc. But if the attempt were to be made cri-
tically, i.e., on the principle of Kant, the unityshall have to be conceived as that of a Lawfrom which all other laws could be rigorously
derived, law which is again an abstract objectand is fully grasped by thought. However,
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 71
for Kant it is only a regulative idea and has
no objectivity. Thus we see that it makes no
difference what kind of unity is taken as the
unity of the world by the speculative con-
sciousness, it is through and through knownand knowable.
But the religious unity need be only partlyknowable
;it need not be wholly knowable,
indeed it is not wholly knowable, because the
demand for it arises in the need of man fora being who could protect and guide and helphim in the world-situation in which he finds
himself. The unity must therefore have the
attributes requisite for the purpose. But theyconstitute the nature of the unity with regard
to in relation with him. They are neither
all the attributes, nor need they necessarily
define the absolute nature of the unity. Andthe humility incident to the attitude towards
the unity and the immense grandeur of the
unity necessarily lead man to maintain that it
surpasses the grasp of his tiny faculties and is
72 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
essentially incomprehensible by him. He hasto confess that >* ^
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 73>
as perfect, the highest activity becomes the
timeless activity of thought which is"dialec-
tic"for Plato, and
"theoria
"for Aristotle :
and human beings become perfect with the
perfection of God the unity of which theyare modes (Spinoza) ; and hence there remains-
no room for activity. But if the unity is
conceived as imperfect, there arise two alterna-
tives. In one case, it would be once for all
imperfect and determined by its inner neces-
sity ; and hence all exertion to make it perfectwould be futile. In the other, that is if the
unity involves progress towards perfection,
it would of necessity grow perfect and no
activity on the part of us human beings is
required for its perfection. In its very nature
the speculative consciousness in knowledge-consciousness. And knowledge in itself pro-duces contemplation and not activity.
But it is quite the other way about with the
religious unity. The need of the religiousunity has arisen in man from the situation that
74 Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid
there are many yearnings in his soul, and theworld around him as well as his own natureraises insuperable obstacles in his way to theirrealisation. The help and guidance from the
religious unity, i.e., God, require and inspirehim to active struggle against these obstacles.
The struggle aims at bringing his own naturein harmony with the Divine Will, and in
bringing the whole order of the world too in
harmony with His Will. This struggle to
create the subjective and objective harmonyis not the means to the realisation of these
yearnings; rather the struggle itself is the
gradual realisation of them. The task is so
gigantic that it must continue till the end of
the world, and requires enormous and inces-
sant work. Indeed the religious consciousness
is yearning it is yearning to become some-
thing, to get to something, to bring about
something; it is practical consciousness and
must needs generate activity.These distinctions between the speculative
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 75
and the religious unities are of paramount
importance. They must not be obliterated.
Now pantheism, the doctrine of Islamic mys-tics called Wahdat-i-Wujud, seems exactly to
do this ; it obliterates these distinctions. It
seems to identify the religious unity with the
speculative unity. The confusion of thesetwo very distinct unities is not confined to
mystics only; it is found also in philosophers.There seems to be an urge in human natureto make of these two one unity. What
happens is this. The two unities lie latent in
the consciousness of the subject, the thinker
or the mystic. Both are descriptions of ulti-
mate reality. The primary approach to it iseither through the medium of thought orthat of intuition, to the speculative unity or
to the religious unity. If to the former, the
attributes of the religious unity are unawares
attached to it, if to the latter, those of the
speculative unity. Thus are the'
Substance'
of Spinoza and the4
Idea'
of Hegel endowed
76 MujaddicTs Conception of Taivhid
with Divine attributes ; and thus are the Deityof Plotinus and God of Jarni deduced fromthe conception of pure Being.
More particularly what seems to happen inthe case of a Muslim mystic is this. To beginwith, he is a Muslim. He believes in God,he believes in His attributes, and he believes
in his own responsibility and in life-after-death ; indeed he believes in all that has
been given to him by the religious conscious-
ness as it manifested itself in Muhammad.Then there happens to arise a yearning in his
soul, the transcendental yearning of Kant,
to know God. Ordinary experience palpablyhas no place here. He is led to believe thatthere is a new kind of experience, a trans-cendental experience which can be acquired.That is, there is something called
"Kashf-o-
Shuhud"by which one can know God. He
takes to it. He now knows-, he realises Godand he realises His nature. The reason thathe now uses in this connection too is Kasijf-
Mujaddid's Conception of Tawhid 77
o-Shuhud ; it is spiritual reason. Thus both
the elements of knowledge, viz., experienceand reason get to their rights ; only they are
transcendental. In this way the Islamic mys-tic passes over to the speculative conscious-
ness to knowledge consciousness. All the
inherent requirements of the speculative con-
sciousness must now be fulfilled; God mustbe grasped now as the speculative unity. The
mystic knows that He is knowable, that Heis immanent, that He is the only existent,etc. The at
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